Winter is a season that is often overlooked when choosing trees for a landscape. The following are five suggestions for trees that add interest when the snow begins to fall.

Betula populifolia or Betula platyphylla 'Whitespire' / Grey Birch. If I had to plant just one tree, this is it. I can't imagine any tree more beautiful in the the winter landscape than this native (or hybridized native). Written about by Edith Roberts and Elsa Rehman in "American Plants for American Gardens," 1929...

"Wherever there are grey birches, Nature is in one of her lightest moods. These grey-white trees of slender form gather together on fairy-like groves. Their slim grace is accentuated by the way they often spring up in fives and sixes from a single root. When they are young they are grey-brown, but later on they are phantom white with black twigs and black notches. The effect is full of that mystery that etchings and and delicate pencil drawings have. The gossamer quality is ever present; in the spring when their filmy foliage is light filled, in summer when their green is soft, in autumn when it is all sunlit yellow, and even in winter when the trees take on again their keynote colors from the snow and dark earth."

photo: nhgardensolutions

**Even in the jewel box size, Brooklyn brownstone garden designs I build, this tree never fails to capture viewers emotions!

Rhus typhina / Staghorn Sumac. A deciduous shrub or small tree that typically grows in colonies and has great architectural structure. After an incredible display of color in the fall, the fruit appear on branches like flames on a candelabra. This fruit remains persistent throughout much of winter.

Staghorn sumac in brooklyn garden design

Acer griseum / Paperbark Maple. What makes this tree so special is it's cinnamon colored exfoliating bark. With the sun low in the sky during winter the tree is easily backlit, taking advantage of their silhouette and the transluscence of the exfoliating bark in a garden design is crucial.

photo: rbge.org

No winter landscape or garden design is complete without "the bones of the garden." That usually means evergreens. Here are two favorites...

Ilex opaca / American Holly. This is the only native holly with spiny-tooth evergreen leaves. In a New York City landscape design I find it works well in the urban garden where buildings block the strong winter winds that can cause it to burn.

Tsuga canadensis / Eastern Hemlock. There are weeping cultivars, columnar cultivars, dwarf cultivars and globular cultivars. Even in it's natural form where it will grow quite large, it still maintains a softness and elegance due to it's branching habit, needle form and dainty, hanging cones.

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